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8/3/2019 Brand Relationship
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The Effects of Brand Relationship Norms on
Consumer Attitudes and Behavior
Pankaj Aggarwal
September 09, 2001
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Abstract:
The key premise underlying this work is that different relationships carry with them specific
norms of behavior. Three experiments tested the general hypothesis that consumers brand
evaluations are guided by the norms of consumer-brand relationships . Two types of consumer-
brand relationships were examined exchange relationships in which people provide benefits
to others in order to get something back, and communal relationships in which benefits are
given to demonstrate concern for others needs. It was hypothesized that the degree of
consistency between the actions taken by a brand and the norms of the particular relationship
influence consumers evaluation of those actions.
Results of Experiment 1 showed that charging a fee for providing a special service violated
communal relationship norms but not exchange relationship norms, causing communal
relationship participants to evaluate the brand poorly relative to the exchange participants.
Results of Experiment 2 showed that an offer of an inexpensive gift rather than cash
compensation for filling out a questionnaire is perceived as a violation of relationship norms by
exchange participants but not by communal participants, leading the former to have a lower
evaluation of the brand. Finally, results of Experiment 3 showed that relative to communal
participants, exchange participants experienced greater violation of relationship norms, and
evaluated the brand lower in response to a request for help from the brand if the request was
made after some time gap rather than immediately after they had sought help from the brand.
Mediation analysis supported the hypothesis that a violation of relationship norms influenced
participants evaluation of the brand as well as their assessment of the relationship strength.
Findings are consistent with the premise that analogous to interpersonal relations, brand-
consumer relationships carry with them socially sanctioned norms of behavior and adherence toor violation of these norms influences the appraisal of specific marketing actions.
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Branding and brand-based differentiation are powerful means for creating and sustaining
competitive advantage. Prior research has examined differences in how consumers perceive
and evaluate brands, for example brand equity (Aaker 1991; Aaker and Biel 1993; Keller 1997;
McQueen, Foley and Deighton 1993), brand personality (Batra, Lehmann and Singh 1993;
Plummer 1985; Aaker 1997) and brand extensions (Nakamoto, McInnis and Jung 1993; Aaker
and Keller 1990). More recently, researchers have noted that consumers differ not only in how
they perceive brands but also in how they relate to brands (Fournier 1998; Muniz Jr. and
OGuinn 2001, Blackston 1993). This line of research has suggested that people sometimes
form relationships with brands in much the same way in which they form relationships with
each other in a social context. For example, Fournier (1998) has argued that consumer-brand
relationships cover a wide spectrum encompassing flings, courtships, best friendships,
arranged marriages and enmities among others. In addition to the existing academic work,
there is some support from marketing practitioners that people may sometimes form
relationships with brands quite like their relationships with other people. A recent paper in the
quarterly strategy journal published by the consulting firm Booz-Allen & Hamilton argues that
some loyal consumers, called brand zealots experience a relationship that goes well beyond
the fulfillment of a functional need (Rozanski, Baum and Wolfsen 1999). These consumers are
militant in their commitment to the brand and have a strong sense of emotional loyalty to the
brand. These brand zealots animate the brand, giving it quasi-human qualities and relate to it
in a way similar to how they relate to human beings.
In addition, there is abundant anecdotal evidence suggesting that consumers commonly
interact with brands in ways that seem more appropriate for relationships between people. Most
of us know some people who are crazy about their cars, or their music systems or even their
watches. The love affair that some consumers have with their VW Beetle can be seen first hand
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on the innumerable web-sites where people have shared their intimate experiences with the
brand (e.g., http://custom1.vw.com/ownExp/). Consumers have been known to give names to
their bugs, and have been observed talking to them and stroking them with affection1. The
New Coke experience demonstrates how the millions of dollars spent on product and research
failed to capture the powerful emotional undercurrents that consumers experienced with the
brand. Mac users, reputed to be very passionate about their brand, have Web pages known to
feature an altered picture of Bill Gates that includes devil-style horns, entitled Save us from the
Gates of Hell (Muniz Jr. and OGuinn 2001). I personally know an advertising executive who
got the Apple logo of Macintosh tattooed on his chest next to his heart! All these examples
suggest that people sometimes form a very close bond with brands. And in some extreme cases,
a passion, that is often associated only with a close circle of friends and family.
The present work is an effort to understand the implications of forming such strong
emotional bonds with brands. This work extends prior work on brand relationships, which has
largely been descriptive, by studying the effect of different types of relationships on consumer
attitudes, behaviors and brand evaluations. The central premise of this research is that
relationships carry with them norms of behavior that guide the actions of the people in the
relationships and that affect their evaluation of the relationship partner. In particular, this work
uses a relational framework to explain differences in consumer responses to marketing actions
taken by a brand. One specific goal of this research is to extend our understanding of the
consumer-brand relationships in order to make predictions that would not be possible using
existing theories about the effects of brand personality, brand loyalty, imagery, or familiarity.
This work also has some important managerial implications. There is a growing interest in
brand-related research in this world of fast changing technology and rapid product imitations.
One of the few sustainable differentiating tools available to marketers is the brands equity that
http://custom1.vw.com/ownExp/http://custom1.vw.com/ownExp/http://custom1.vw.com/ownExp/8/3/2019 Brand Relationship
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they can build. The relationship metaphor, and the work presented here, can be seen as an effort
at extending the static concept of equity into an interactive, dynamic process.
BRANDS AS RELATIONSHIP PARTNERS
The types of brand relationships outlined in prior work suggest a continuum, depending
upon how close, personal and deep the relationship is perceived to be. For example, Fournier
(1998) describes one of her participants relationships with Coke Classic and Ivory as best
friendship but with trial size shampoos as flings and with Gatorade as committed
partnerships. Her research shows that people describe the relationship with brands in the same
terms as relationships with other people. However, the idea that people form relationships with
brands is not without controversy. Prior research has noted that people and objects differ in
many ways and different approaches may be needed to examine how consumers interact with
each of them (Fiske and Taylor 1991; Lingle Altom and Medin 1984; Wyer, Srull and Gordon
1986). For example, Kardes (1986) notes that the effect of initial judgment on subsequent
judgments of products is different from the extent of this effect on social judgments and
impression formation of people. Lingle et al (1984) suggest that judgments of social stimuli
(i.e. people) are likely to depend on inferred, abstract information (e.g. traits) whereas
judgments of non-social stimuli (e.g. products) are likely to depend on concrete attributes.
Menon and Johar (1997) find that the positivity effect in judgments of social experiences is not
likely to manifest in judgments of product experiences. One reason noted for expecting non-
social judgments to differ from social judgments is that people often judge others using the self
as a frame of reference (Fong and Markus 1982) whereas no such comparison is possible in
judging non-social objects (Fiske and Taylor 1991).
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While acknowledging that relationships with non-social objects are different from social
relationships, there may be reasons why people sometimes interact with brands in ways that
parallel human interactions. First, consumers often do not distinguish between brands and
manufacturers of brands. To them the company is the brand, and the brand is the company.
This perception is more likely for service brands (e.g. hotels, airlines and banks), for brands that
have a combination of products and services as their core offering (e.g. many online stores) and
for brands in which consumers have a direct interaction with people who work for the company.
When people interact with human beings as representatives of the brand, it is easy to use
relationships used in human interactions for such brands.
Second, even when companies focus primarily on selling physical products, some
consumers may think of the brand as a living being. Animism, the belief that objects possess
souls, has long been recognized in the domain of products (Gilmore 1919). McGill (1998) has
looked at differences between natural and artifactual (man-made) categories and suggested that
people treat some brands and products as if their characteristics are produced by an
underlying, defining essence, analogous to DNA or a soul, and not by human design or
construction. Moon (2000) has demonstrated that many of the social rules and conventions
that govern interpersonal interaction also apply to the human-computer relationship. This
finding is consistent with what other writers have suggested that computers have characteristics
of natural categories whereas most other artifactual categories such as tables or chairs do not
(Gelman 1988; Gelman and Coley 1991; Keil 1986). Thus, even for some physical products
people may think of the products as having a soul or, at least, more human-like properties.
Third, the brand communicates with its consumers in a large number of ways. The
dynamic and repeated interactions in the form of direct mail, ad messages, discount-coupons,
and freebies have strengthened the sense of an ongoing relationship between the brand and the
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consumer. Over time, with the use of interactive media like the internet and emails, this sense
of two-way relationship and communication has become even stronger and more pervasive.
Finally, marketing practitioners and researchers often use projective techniques to get
the consumers to describe the brands in terms of age, gender, socio-economic characteristics
and other personality traits (D. Aaker 1991; Keller 1998). Prior research has found that brands
are often perceived to have a gender (Levy, 1959), and three of the five dimensions used to
describe brand personality are the same as those used to describe human personality traits (J.
Aaker 1997). Marketers also encourage this perception by using brand mascots in advertising
messages in an effort to bring the brand alive (e.g., Michelin Man, Energizer Bunny, Mr.
Clean, Hush Puppies, Pillsbury Dough Boy, etc). And once products and brands are associated
with human qualities, it is easy to see how people may interact with brands in ways that parallel
their social relationships.
It is important to clarify that this work acknowledges that brand relationships are
different in many ways from the relationships that people form with other people. The key
assertion here is not that people necessarily form relationships with brands that share the same
richness and depth as those between human partners, but that consumers often behave as ifthey
have relationships with brands that parallel human relationships in a social setting. And when
they behave as if they have a relationship with brands, the consumer-brand interactions are
mediated by the norms that govern these social relationships. Prior experience with the brand or
specific marketing communication may bring the norms of different relationships to the
forefront of peoples minds so that they interpret the communication and the actions of the
brand through the lens of the relationship norms. This work thus attempts to understand how
this consumer-brand interaction is influenced by the norms of social relationships.
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NORMS OF BEHAVIOR AND THEIR ROLE IN SOCIAL INTERACTION
The key premise underlying this work is that social relationships carry with them norms
of behavior that the relationship partners are expected to follow. Norms emerge from
interactions with others; they may or may not be stated explicitly, and sanctions for deviating
from them come from social networks, not the legal system. These norms include general
societal expectations for our behavior, expectations of others for our behavior, and our
expectations of our own behavior. One view of norms suggests that norms develop to balance
the selfish desires of the individual with the need for social control and collective survival
(Walster, Walster and Berscheid 1978). Thus, one of the primary functions of social norms is to
allow people to live together in peace. Cialdini and Trost (1993) have argued that these norms
are acquired by people in a social setting over long time periods of the socialization process. As
these norms become internalized, they serve as a valuable guide for everyday behavior and
allow people to function in situations that may otherwise be new. Thus, when faced with
different social situations, people use the norms that are salient at the time to guide them on the
right thing to do. In addition, people also tend to use these norms to judge others behavior.
A particular action may therefore be a part of the norms of one relationship and be regarded as
good and appropriate by one person while the same action may be seen as a serious violation of
the norms of another relationship and perceived to be improper by another person. For
example, keeping a close tab on how much money one spends on a relationship partner may be
considered appropriate in a commercial transaction, but may appear inappropriate in
interactions with family members. It is this adherence to or violation of the relationship norms
that often determines our appraisals when we interact with our relationship partners.
Using three experiments, this work tests the effect of adherence to or violation of the
norms of relationship in the context of consumer-brand interactions. In this work, I use the
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norms associated with the receiving and giving of help or providing benefits to test if consumers
respond differently to the same marketing action depending upon the type of relationship that
they have with the brand. The overall goal of all these studies is to test if consumers reactions
can be distinguished in instances when the relationship with the brand is thought of largely in
economic terms (i.e., balanced exchange) from instances when the relationship takes on the
characteristics of close personal relationships. This work thus attempts to explain why we
might sometimes observe consumer behavior that appears irrational from a business perspective
but makes perfect sense from a personal relationship perspective. This work, however, does not
attempt to study the antecedents of a relationship per se or to identify which relationship is more
naturally formed under different circumstances.
NORMS OF COMMUNAL AND EXCHANGE RELATIONSHIPS
In the present research, I rely on the distinction that is made in social psychology
literature between relationships that are based primarily on economic factors and those based
more on social factors (Goffman 1961). The differences between economic relationships and
social relationships have been studied in some detail by Clark and Mills (Clark and Mills 1979;
Clark and Mills 1993; Clark 1986; Clark, Mills and Powell 1986; Mills and Clark 1982, Mills
and Clark 1986). These authors distinguish between what they term exchange relationships and
communal relationships mainly in terms of the norms governing giving of benefits to the
partner. Other authors have suggested more elaborate break-downs (e.g. Fiske 1992), but for
the sake of simplicity in this research I adopt the two relationship-type version of Clark and
Mills. Later research could extend this conceptual framework to a more complex one.
Exchange relationships are those in which a person provides a benefit to the partner with
the specific expectation of receiving a comparable benefit in return. The receipt of a benefit
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incurs a debt or obligation to return a comparable benefit. People are concerned with how much
they have received in exchange for how much they have given, and how much is still owed to
the partner. Relationships between strangers and people who interact for business purposes are
often characteristic of this type of relationship. On the other hand, relationships in which the
key concern is mutual support by the partners are termed communal relationships. In such
relationships, people give benefits to others to demonstrate a concern for that person and to
express attention to their needs. They also expect others to demonstrate a similar concern for
their own needs. Most family relationships, romantic relationships and friendships fall in this
category. It is important to note here that communal relationships are not completely bereft of a
sense of reciprocity and shared giving. Each individual interaction however, is not scrutinized
for evenness or balance of the transaction. Instead, the relationship may be evaluated over a
longer time period. The norms of behavior of the two relationships are summarized below as
has been outlined by Clark and her colleagues (Clark 1981; Clark 1984; Clark 1986; Clark and
Mills 1979; Clark and Mills 1993; Clark and Taraban 1991; Clark, Mills and Powell 1986;
Clark Mills and Corcoran 1989; Mills and Clark 1982, Mills and Clark 1986)
Exchange Relationship Communal Relationship
1. Prompt repayment for specific benefits Prompt repayment for specific benefitsreceived is expected. received is not expected.
2. Desirable to give comparable benefits in Less desirable to give comparable benefitsreturn for benefits received. in return for benefits received.
3. More likely to ask for repayments for benefits Less likely to ask for repayments for
rendered. benefits rendered.
4. More likely to keep track of inputs and Less likely to keep track of individualoutcomes in a joint task. inputs and outcomes in a joint task.
5. Divide rewards according to each persons Divide rewards according to each personsinputs and contributions . needs and requirements.
6. Helping others is less likely. Helping others is more likely.
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7. Requesting help from others is less likely. Requesting help from others is more likely.
8. Accepting help with money is preferred to no Accepting help with no monetary paymentpayment. is preferred.
9. Keeping track of others needs is less likely. Keeping track of others needs is more
likely
10. Less responsive to others emotional states. More responsive to others emotional states
In sum, exchange relationships involve a careful and detailed cost-benefit evaluation and
the focus is on keeping track of benefits given and benefits received. On the other hand,
communal relationships focus on mutual support and cooperation and thus take a perspective
that transcends emphasis on self-interest alone. These two relationship types are not mutually
exclusive, and it is possible for someone to have a strong communal anda strong exchange
relationship with someone else depending on the circumstances. For example, a business
partnership with ones brother is likely to lead to norms that are communal at certain times and
exchange at others. One of the reasons such relationships are difficult to manage in practice is
that the partners may often be uncertain about what norms to apply in specific situations.
Nonetheless, in this research I have followed the conventions of the social psychology literature
and treated these two dimensions as if they are two ends of one scale rather than two orthogonal
dimensions that have varying strengths. Later research could explore the implications of more
complex, multi-faceted relationships.
CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK FOR DEVELOPING THE HYPOTHESES
The present research is based on two key premises. First, relationships that people form
with others can be categorized as either communal or exchange. Second, these two relationship
types have their own distinct norms of behavior that lead to very different and predictable
behavior patterns. Thus, if these different relationship norms are made salient in a brand
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interaction, then consumers are likely to use these norms to guide their behavior and their
evaluation of the brand.
The reason why the context of a request for help was chosen was because the key
distinction between exchange and communal relationships is based on the motivation for
providing benefits to the partner, and the norms associated with request for help capture the
essence of that distinction. In exchange relationships benefits are given to partners with the
specific expectation of receiving comparable benefits in return. People are concerned with how
much they have received in exchange for how much they have given. In this context, an offer
of payment is likely to act as a motivator for providing help. If a comparable reward is not
forthcoming a person is less likely to be responsive to a request for help.
On the other hand, in communal relationships people give benefits to others to
demonstrate a concern for them, and to express attention to their needs. People feel responsible
for the others welfare and feel obligated to respond positively when the partner has a need.
Additionally, members are likely to avoid giving benefits directly comparable to benefits they
receive from partners since a tit for tat approach transforms the relationship into an economic
one, and expresses a reluctance to be a communal partner (Batson, Coke, Janoski and Hanson
1978; OMalley and Andrews 1983). Thus, if a person were to seek help without offering any
reciprocal compensation it would encourage communal relationship partners to give the help but
a request for help accompanied with a reciprocal compensation would be shunned. However, if
a reciprocal gesture is made as an expression of gratitude, it is not evaluated on its cash value
even a cheap gift is deemed good enough because symbolism is key, not the value.
These potential reactions to requests for help are consistent with prior work that found
that people were more willing to help when they desired a communal relationship than when
they desired an exchange relationship (Williamson and Clark 1989), and that monetary payment
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for help undermined the social value of help (Batson et al. 1978; OMalley and Andrews 1983).
While prior work has not examined the interaction of relationship type and offer of payment for
help, norms of relationship suggest that one might expect a significant interaction effect. For
example, it might be expected that relative to exchange relationships, communal partners would
react more positively to requests for help if these requests were not accompanied by offers of
payments, and more negatively if accompanied by payment.
OVERVIEW OF THE EXPERIMENTS
In three experiments, norms of the two relationship types were first primed with a brief
scenario description. Participants were then presented with identical action from the brand in
the context of request for help. Finally measures of participants reactions to the marketing
action and their overall evaluation of the brand was taken. The basic premise of this research is
that the consumers evaluation of the brand depends upon whether or not the norms of the
relationship are violated. In all three experiments it was expected that if the marketing actions
were inconsistent with the norms of the relationship then not only would the actions be
evaluated negatively, but the overall evaluation of the brand would also be negative. However,
if the marketing actions were consistent with the norms then the participants would have a high
overall evaluation of the brand. Thus, in addition to participants reactions to the specific
marketing action taken by the brand, measures of participants overall evaluation of the brand
were also taken. Additionally, in Experiment 3 more direct measures of norm conformity and
violation were taken. Mediation analysis was done to study the role of norm violation in
participants evaluation of the brand, and their perception of the strength of the relationship. In
three experiments described below I test specific hypotheses about consumer reactions due to a
violation of relationship norms under different conditions.
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EXPERIMENT 1: HELP NORM AND CHARGING FOR RENDERING HELP
The objective of this experiment was to evaluate the influence of the norms of helping in
a brand relationship context. In this experiment I examined participants reactions to being
charged a fee for the help rendered by a brand. The participants were exposed to a brief
description of a prior relationship between a consumer and a hypothetical bank and asked to
project themselves into the role of the consumer. These descriptions were aimed at triggering
either communal norms or exchange norms. In particular, the scenario described a consumer
who seeks some help from a bank for resolving a conflict with a utility company and later either
gets charged for the help or not. Measures of participants reactions to the marketing actions
and overall evaluation of the brand were taken.
It was hypothesized that a demand for payment violated the norms of communal
relationship since the relationship is based on mutual concern for each others needs, but did not
violate the norms of exchange relationship since it is based on quid pro quo. Hence it was
predicted that consumers reactions to being charged and their brand evaluations would be
different across the two relationship types with communal consumers evaluating the action
negatively relative to exchange consumers. On the other hand, if the brand did not charge any
fee for the service, it was in conformity with communal norms but in violation of the exchange
norms. Consequently I expected that exchange participants would respond more negatively
when not charged a fee compared to the communal participants. Following is the specific
prediction made:
Hypothesis 1: Participants evaluation of a marketing action (being charged or not charged)differs depending upon the relationship type. Specifically, when assessed a fee for a specialservice, communal participants will rate this action lower than exchange participants. When nofee is assessed, communal participants will rate the action higher than exchange participants.
It was further predicted that a marketing action that violated the relationship norms
would not only lead to a negative evaluation of the action but also undermine the perception of
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the relationship with the brand. It was thus hypothesized that the response of the participants
would manifest itself in their overall evaluation of the brand. Hence the following hypothesis:
Hypothesis 2: Participants overall brand evaluation in response to marketing action (beingcharged or not charged) differs depending upon the relationship type. Specifically, when
assessed a fee for a special service, communal participants will evaluate the brand lower thanexchange participants. When no fee is assessed, communal participants will evaluate the brandhigher than exchange participants.
Participants:
Forty students in a mid-sized university in mid-western USA were given $5.00 for
participating in a 20-minute study. This experiment took about 5 minutes within that set of
studies. The participants were recruited through notices posted on campus.
Stimuli and Procedure:
Participants were presented with a brief description of their relationship with a fictitious
bank. Since relationships are formed over long periods of time, it might seem nearly impossible
to manipulate the relationship type over the course of an experiment. However, prior work
indicates that even without actual long-term relationships being formed by participants, the
effects of relationship norms may nevertheless be observed suggesting that these norms can be
primed in laboratory studies (Clark and Mills 1993). Participants were thus presented
descriptions to prime relationship norms, and were randomly assigned to one of exchange or
communal descriptions. The participants were asked to imagine themselves in the situation
described, and then to answer the questions that followed. Care was taken to ensure that the
two conditions primed only the type of relationship, and did not manipulate the perception of
quality of the brand. The descriptions are given below.
Priming of Exchange Relationship Norms:You have been banking with Grove Bank for the last five years. You have used the bank quite extensively andhave been very happy with their efficiency and the quality of their services. You have taken a loan from the bankand in fact they were able to get the paperwork done quite quickly. Their interest rates are also among the best inthe city. You also use their credit card because they offer a large credit limit and very good interest rates. GroveBank also periodically makes some offers to you that appear to be of great value. In the past, whenever you havegone to the branch you have gotten your work done very fast they respect your time, and get the job done fast.
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Their executives seem to be quite well trained and smart. Overall your experience with Grove Bank has beenexcellent.
Priming of Communal Relationship Norms:You have been banking with Grove Bank for the last five years. You have used the bank quite extensively andhave been very happy with the quality of their services. When you first joined school, you had opened an accountwith them. You still remember how thrilled you were when you got your first credit card from them. You have
always associated the bank with positive feelings since you often visit the bank whenever you receive money fromhome. The bank has always treated you well. Over the past few years, whenever you have visited the bank youhave had a very pleasant and warm interaction. They seem to be taking a personal interest in you, and have oftentaken the initiative to suggest ways to better manage your idle funds in the bank. Overall your experience withGrove Bank has been memorable.
After reading the description, the participants were asked several questions designed to
measure the effectiveness of the relationship priming. Participants were then presented the
request for help and the response from the bank in terms of (no) charges for it, as shown below
with the fee charged condition in brackets and the no charge condition in parenthesis.
Recently, you faced a problem. You had written a check to ComEd for $35.47. You later received a letter fromComEd saying that the money was never received by them. As soon as you got this letter, you called up GroveBank, and asked the clerk to find out what had happened. The clerk told you that the money was sent to ComEd onthe specified date. You requested the clerk to write to ComEd and let them know about it. [One week later youreceived a letter in the mail from Grove Bank that the problem was resolved at a charge of $20.00]. (One weeklater you received a letter in the mail from Grove Bank that the problem was resolved at no charge to you).
Design:
The experiment was a 2 x 2 between-participants design on Relationship Type
(communal, exchange) and Marketing Action (fee charged, no fee charged).
Dependent Variables:
Participants were first asked to respond to questions intended to check the effectiveness
of the relationship priming. The first communality measure consisted of two questions aimed
at capturing the feelings associated with communal norms (have warm feelings for brand, feel a
special bond). Participants were then asked to imagine the brand coming alive and becoming a
person. Participants were asked to rate the extent to which the brand was like each of four
people (a business partner, a close friend, a merchant, or a family member). High (low) ratings
on the communality measure, high (low) ratings on the brand as a friend or family member,
and low (high) ratings of the brand as business partner or merchant would be consistent with
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priming of communal (exchange) norms. In addition, participants responded to a five-item
measure of perceived quality (is the brand a good buy, likelihood to try another brand of equal
quality, importance of price, quality of products, and quality of services). This measure was
included as a control to ensure that priming of relationship norms did not also affect perceptions
of quality.
After answering the questions aimed at measuring the effectiveness of priming,
participants were shown the request for help scenario and were then asked questions about it.
Participants responded to three questions about the brands marketing action to charge (or not
charge) for the extra service rendered in response to the special request (appropriateness of
charges/no charges, extent to which it was a good business practice, willingness to make the
payment all aimed to test Hypothesis 1). Next, brand evaluation and attitudinal measures were
taken on nine items (good-bad, poor quality-high quality, poor service-great service,
commonplace-unique, not for me-just for me, will never buy again-continue buying it, dislike-
like, dissatisfied-satisfied, and unfavorable-favorable aimed at testing Hypothesis 2). All the
items were measured on a 7-point scale.
Results:
Effectiveness of Priming: Results indicate that the descriptions effectively primed
different relationship norms. See Table 1, which shows participants ratings on different
questions asked to measure the effectiveness of priming for Experiment 1. Specifically,
communal participants provided higher ratings of communality than those in the exchange
condition, F (1, 39) = 12.03, p
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quality also revealed no difference across the two relationship conditions, F (1, 39) = 0.00,
p>0.95.
Reactions to Marketing Actions: The participants evaluation of the marketing action
was examined first on three different items. These three items were combined to create one
measure termed Reaction to Marketing Actions (Cronbachs Alpha= 0.81). Table 2 shows the
participants ratings on the combined measure. ANOVA on this measure revealed a main effect
of Relationship Type, F (1, 38) =5.49, p
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Marketing Action interaction on Overall Evaluation, F (1,38) =11.28, p
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One possible explanation for why the hypothesis was not supported when exchange
norms were violated is that when no fee was charged, even though the norms of exchange
relationship were violated, the brands action also resulted in some monetary benefit for the
consumer (from no fee being charged). In a brand context consumers are frequently exposed to
free offers and promotions, and even tend to expect free things from brands. Hence, when
consumers were not charged for the service, even though it was a violation of exchange
relationship norms, the violation may not have been perceived as such or it may have been seen
as a mild violation leading to the muted results seen in the experiment. In fact, this specific
example might be an example of a situation where the effects of norm violation in a consumer-
brand context are different from what one might expect in a person-to-person relationship.
The other possible reason for why the violation of exchange norms resulted in muted
effects may be that the amount of fee charged was a bit too high even for the exchange
participants ($20 for sending a letter for a bill that was $35.47 in the first place). This is
supported by the fact that there was a main effect of the Charge. Thus even though being
charged a fee would normally be in keeping with the norms of exchange norms, in this case the
amount of fee being relatively high made the response of communal and exchange participants
comparable. It is possible that if the amount of the fee was made lower, then communal
participants might still have seen the charge as negative while the exchange participants might
have reacted positively to it as a good deal.
However, neither of the above two explanations can fully account for all the results.
The main effect of receiving a monetary benefit cannot fully explain why there was a significant
difference in the responses of communal and exchange participants in one condition (when they
were charged a fee) but not in the other condition (when they were not charged a fee). There is
an interaction effect of monetary benefit with norm violation i.e. the effect of norm violation
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works differently depending upon whether or not the participants receive monetary benefit or
not. Clearly, monetary benefit does not simply boost the evaluations for all participants the
same way since if it were so then the difference between the evaluations of exchange
participants (who experienced norm violation when no fee was charged) and the communal
participants (who did not experience norm violation) when no fee was charged should also have
been significant. One possible explanation for this is that there is something unique about
communal norms that resulted in the findings that were observed. Thus, Experiment 2 was
designed to test if the muted results observed when exchange norms were violated were due to
something unique about communal norms or if it was the interaction effect of the accompanying
benefits that led to these results.
EXPERIMENT 2: EXPLORING FURTHER REPAYMENT FOR HELP RENDERED
To test whether the results found in Experiment 1 were due to something unique about
communal relationship norms per se, in Experiment 2 a scenario was created that attempted to
reverse the pattern of norm violation. Thus, in Experiment 2 the scenario results in norm
violation being felt more keenly by exchange participants without any mitigating effect of a
compensating benefit. Conversely, norm violation experienced by communal participants was
accompanied with some compensating monetary benefits. If monetary benefit and norm
violation have an interaction effect as was observed in Experiment 1, then this compensating
benefit would mitigate the negative response of the communal participants. Hence, it was
expected that when the brands action violated norms of communal relationship but not
exchange relationship, the communal participants would not judge the brand more harshly than
exchange participants since the violation of norms is also accompanied with a compensating
benefit for the communal participants and we would expect an interaction effect between norm
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violation and compensating benefit. On the other hand, if the findings of Experiment 1 were to
be generally applicable, then it was expected that when a marketing action taken by the brand
violated norms of exchange relationship but not of communal relationship, the exchange
participants would judge the brand more harshly than communal participants would.
In addition, the scenario was developed such that the direction of help was reversed
instead of the help being sought by the consumer, in Experiment 2, the help was sought by the
brand. Participants were presented a situation in which a brand of chocolate needed urgent help
with a tedious market research task. The brand offered the customers either cash compensation
for their time or an inexpensive gift as a token of appreciation.
Prior work on gift giving (Belk and Coon 1993) has shown that gifts are seen as
symbolic gestures of love and commitment. An offer of a symbolic but inexpensive gift is
likely to be in keeping with communal norms since it is a good indicator of appreciation and
gratitude. However, an inexpensive token is likely to be perceived as a violation of exchange
norms since it is unlikely to compensate for the time and effort that people put in. And a
repayment in kind in the form of a gift or some such thing is often seen as not a good way to
pay back for specific benefits received. So it was expected that compared to communal
participants, exchange participants would evaluate the offer of a gift more negatively. On the
other hand, offers of monetary payments are often seen as a good way to compensate others for
services rendered. It was therefore hypothesized that cash payment for time and effort is a clear
indicator of quid pro quo, and hence would be in keeping with exchange norms. Conversely,
cash payment for rendering help to a partner would violate communal norms, since people in
such a relationship help each other because they care for each other and not to get cash
compensation. However, cash receipt from a brand is also an extra benefit for individuals, and
especially in a consumer-brand context, it was expected to reduce the negative effect of norm
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violation. So very little difference was expected in the evaluation of the brands action made by
the communal and exchange participants when cash compensation was given to them. As
before, it was expected that the reactions from participants would differ across the different
conditions not just for the marketing actions, but also on their overall evaluation of the brand.
The following are the specific hypotheses are being tested in this experiment:
Hypothesis 3: Participants evaluation of a marketing action (being offered cash or a gift forhelping) differs depending upon the relationship type. Specifically, when offered a cheap giftfor providing help, exchange participants will rate this action lower than communal participants.When cash payment is offered, exchange participants will rate the action equal or higher thancommunal participants.
Hypothesis 4: Participants overall brand evaluation in response to marketing action (being
offered cash or a gift for helping) differs depending upon the relationship type. Specifically,when offered a cheap gift providing help, exchange participants will evaluate the brand lowerthan communal participants. When offered cash payment, exchange participants will evaluatethe brand equal or higher than communal participants.
Participants:
Participants were thirty-seven students at a mid-sized university in mid-western USA,
who were recruited in the same manner as participants in Experiment 1. Participants were
screened to ensure that they had not participated in a similar study earlier.
Stimuli and Procedure:
As in Experiment 1, participants were presented with a brief description of their
relationship with a fictitious brand of chocolate designed to prime relationship norms.
Participants were randomly assigned to one of exchange or communal descriptions, asked to
imagine themselves in the situation described, and then to answer the questions that followed.
Again, care was taken to ensure that the two conditions primed only the type of relationship,
and did not manipulate the perception of brand quality. The descriptions are given below.
Priming of Exchange Relationship Norms:Imagine that your favorite brand of chocolate is Buon Chocolate. In your many years of using the product, BuonChocolate has been consistent in providing you with high quality product, great taste and attractive packaging at areasonable price. You have tried other chocolate brands over the years. Many are decent but none of them arenearly as good. Buon Chocolate is not only made with high quality ingredients, it also has a deliciously creamy
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flavor and a large variety of assortments. In a bid to remain competitive, the brand has been improved over theyears with new technology, product forms, packaging, and flavors. Prices, however, have remained competitive tothis day, and this product is to your way of thinking one of the best values in the grocery store. You wish otherproducts offered such a favorable exchange. Youve also been pleased to notice that Buon Chocolate is easilyavailable almost everywhere. Recent consumer reports about the quality of Buon Chocolate have been quitefavorable giving it 4.5 (out of 5.0).
Priming of Communal Relationship Norms:Imagine that your favorite brand of chocolate is Buon Chocolate. Buon Chocolate has been your favorite eversince you were a kid. Your parents knew that you loved this brand, its deliciously creamy taste and brightlycolored package. They used to buy it for you as a treat on those special occasions. Some of your fondestchildhood memories involve your parents buying Buon Chocolate for you, and then you sitting down to enjoy it,and treasuring every minute of it. You would frequently take it to school and steal small bites during class, trying tomake it last the entire day. Buon Chocolate seemed to take great pains to make the whole experience fun greatpackage, a wide assortment and those special holiday treats. Each time you opened the pack, you would feel asense of excitement and anticipation. To this day,whenever you buy a pack you feel as if you are with an old friend.Recent consumer reports about the quality of Buon Chocolate have been quite favorable giving it 4.5 (out of 5.0).
As in Experiment 1, the participants were then asked questions designed to measure the
effectiveness of the relationship priming after they had read the description. Participants were
then shown the request for help from the chocolate brand with an offer of a cash payment or a
gift with the cash offer condition in brackets and offer of gift in parenthesis, as shown below.
You recently saw an ad from Buon Chocolate informing their customers how one of their competitors has launcheda false attack on them in a foreign market. Buon Chocolate would like to take immediate corrective action andneeds some information from their long time customers. They need their customers to send true stories,experiences and anecdotes that involved Buon Chocolates. This would give them the ammunition to counter thefalse claims of the competition. [Buon Chocolate would be willing to compensate you for your time by making apayment of $5.00]. (Buon Chocolate would be grateful to you for your help and would send you a Buon key chain
as a token of their appreciation).
Design:
The experiment was a 2 x 2 between-participants design on Relationship Type (communal,
exchange) and Marketing Action (gift, cash).
Dependent Variables:
Measures of the effectiveness of priming were the same as those in Experiment 1.
Control measures to assess participants quality perception were also the same five items, the
only exception being that the question about the perception of service quality was replaced with
a question about the perception of product taste. Participants were then shown the request for
help scenario and were then asked questions about it. Participants responded to four questions
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about the brands request for help accompanied with an offer of cash compensation or an offer
of a gift (likelihood to help, time likely to spend, amount of details likely to provide, personal
information likely to reveal all aimed to test Hypothesis 3). Finally, brand evaluation and
attitudinal measures were taken on similar nine items as in Experiment 1 (good-bad, poor
quality-high quality, poor taste-great taste, commonplace-unique, not for me-just for me, will
never buy again-continue buying it, dislike-like, dissatisfied-satisfied, and unfavorable-
favorable aimed at testing Hypothesis 4).
Results:
Effectiveness of Priming: Table 3 displays results for the questions asked to measure the
effectiveness of the priming, and perceptions of quality. As in Experiment 1, participants
average ratings of communality were compared across relationship conditions. ANOVA
showed that the participants in the communal condition had a higher communality score than
those in the exchange condition, F (1, 36) = 15.59, p0.25.
Reactions to Marketing Actions: As in Experiment 1, the participants responses to
marketing actions were examined first (See Table 4). The four questions that measured
consumers responses to the request for help were combined into one measure called Reactions
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to Marketing Actions (Cronbachs Alpha = 0.84). Contrary to Hypothesis 3, ANOVA revealed
no significant effects for the Relationship Type X Marketing Action interaction, F (1, 36) =
1.36, p>0.25; for the Relationship Type main effect, F (1,36) = 0.99, p>0.30, or for the
Marketing Action main effect, F (1, 36) = 0.03, p>0.85. Even though the interaction was not
significant, the pattern of results was consistent with the predictions.
Brand Evaluation: I then examined differences in participants attitudes and brand
evaluations. The nine items were collapsed into one factor termed Overall Evaluation
(Cronbachs Alpha = 0.96). As predicted by Hypothesis 4, the type of compensation for help
elicited different evaluations from the participants depending upon the type of the relationship.
ANOVA revealed a significant Relationship Type X Marketing Action interaction on Overall
Evaluation, F (1,36) = 4.37, p0.15, nor was the main effect for Marketing Action, F (1, 36) = 0.25, p>0.60.
Specific contrast showed that when offered a gift, exchange participants evaluated the brand
lower than communal participants, F (1, 36)=6.88, p0.70. Considered alternately, exchange participants brand evaluation was
marginally lower when offered a gift than when offered cash, F (1, 36)= 3.44, p0.25.
Discussion:
Experiment 2 was designed to provide additional test for the hypothesis that relationship
norms influence consumers response to marketing actions and their overall evaluation of the
brand. Unlike in Experiment 1, different offers of compensation did not elicit significantly
different reactions to the brands action of requesting for help depending upon the type of
relationship, even though the pattern of results was consistent with the theoretical predictions.
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It is possible that the null response was due to the relatively weaker priming of
relationship types, as evidenced by the ratings given by participants on their perception of the
brand as a businessperson/merchant. The other possibility is that the scenario in Experiment 1
might have been framed by the participants as a loss (having to pay a charge for a service),
while the scenario in Experiment 2 might have been framed more as a gain (getting some cash
or key-chain). And because people tend to respond more to losses than to gains, it is possible
that this led to the lack of significant results that were observed in Experiment 2. Further work
would be necessary to explore this hypothesis and test if the strength of consumers reactions
depend upon whether the brands action is perceived as a gain or as a loss. It is interesting to
note that even though the results were not strong enough to capture the effects on all measures,
the consumers did experience some violation of the norms and formed an evaluation of the
brand that differed significantly across different conditions. This has some important
implications for practitioners as will be discussed in a later section.
The results of Experiment 2, however, lend support to the hypothesis that the type of
compensation elicits different evaluation of the brand depending upon what relationship norms
are salient. Specifically, the results show that exchange consumers evaluated the brand lower
when offered a cheap gift as compensation for helping a brand than communal consumers. The
norms of relationship suggest that in an exchange relationship partners understand that the
benefits are given to each other with an expectation of getting comparable benefits in return,
and an offer to pay cash is in keeping with exchange norms. However, a cheap key chain as a
payment is seen as an unfair compensation for the time and effort spent on it, violating the
norms of exchange relationship. But in a communal relationship what is important is that
partners appreciate the help that is provided by others and a gift as a gesture of appreciation is
considered appropriate. Thus, there were significant differences in participants evaluation.
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On the other hand, results showed that the evaluation of exchange and communal participants
did not differ significantly when cash payment was made for providing help. While cash
compensation is in keeping with the norms of exchange relationship, it is possible that even
though cash payment violates communal norms, participants did respond negatively to norm
violation when they receive a monetary benefit (to the tune of the cash amount received) since,
as indicated earlier, in a commercial setting consumers are often exposed to offers of cash
discounts from marketers. As a result, this norm violation did not elicit a strong reaction from
them unlike in personal relationships where a cash offer for providing help to a partner would
be considered quite offensive.
Thus, the results of Experiment 2 replicate the findings of Experiment 1 whereby
participants in the two relationship conditions respond significantly differently in their
evaluation of the brand depending upon whether or not the norms of that relationship were
violated when there is no accompanying monetary benefit. In addition, the results also show
that the participants in the two relationships types do not show any significant differences in
their responses to brands actions if these actions are accompanied with a monetary benefit
irrespective of the fact that these actions violate the norms of relationship or not. Thus, the
results of Experiment 2 show that clearly there was nothing unique about communal norms that
led to the results that we observed in Experiment 1, and that there is a seemingly an interaction
effect of monetary benefit with norm violation on the responses of the participants.
EXPERIMENT 3: EXPLORING THE MEDIATING ROLE OF NORMS INFLUENCE
OF TIMING OF REQUEST ON CONSUMER RESPONSES
The objectives of this experiment were twofold: 1) to provide additional support for the
hypothesis that the degree of consistency between brands actions and relationship norms
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influenced consumers responses, and 2) to provide a more direct evidence of the role of norms
of relationships on consumers evaluation of brands and the specific actions taken by marketers.
To get a more direct evidence of the effects of norm violation, specific questions were asked to
assess the degree of norm violation and norm conformity experienced by the participants in
response to a marketing action. In addition, more items were included to more directly measure
the effectiveness of priming of the relationship norms.
The third experiment described a situation in which some help is sought by a brand in
response to the request for help from the consumer either immediately afterwards or after some
time gap. This experiment, thus, examined if a longer time gap between help given and help
sought caused participants to respond differently depending upon the relationship type. The
thinking behind this approach follows from the norms of the two relationship types. If a request
for help by a partner is countered with a return request but with a delay of some time, it is likely
to be seen as a genuine need expressed by the partner and would be in keeping with norms of
communal relationship. Carrying the debt may even be seen as a bonding experience.
However, a delayed request for return favor, being distanced in time, is more likely to be
perceived as a way to get free help, and would be seen as a violation of the norms of exchange
relationship. Thus, it was expected that communal participants would react more positively to a
request for help made with a time delay than would exchange participants. On the other hand, if
the request for help by a consumer is immediately countered with a return request, it is more
likely to be seen as quid pro quo and hence in keeping with the norms of exchange relationship.
Conversely, if the request for help by a communal partner is immediately countered with a
request for a return favor then the motivation for providing the help is more likely to be
attributed to getting something back in return violating the norms of communal relationship.
However, since communal partners are more likely to be willing to help each other (Williamson
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and Clark 1989), it was expected that the negative response by the participants might be muted.
Hence the specific hypotheses are as below:
Hypothesis 5: Participants evaluation of a marketing action (timing of the request for help)differs depending upon the relationship type. Specifically, if a brand seeks return help with a
delay after having helped a consumer, exchange participants will rate this action lower thancommunal participants. When the return request is immediate, exchange participants will ratethe action equal or higher than communal participants.
As in the earlier experiments, it was also hypothesized that the response of the
participants would not be limited to just how they react to the action per se but would also
manifest itself in their overall perception of the brand. Hence the following hypothesis:
Hypothesis 6: Participants overall brand evaluation in response to marketing action (timing of
the request for help) differs depending upon the relationship type. Specifically, if a brand seeksreturn help with a delay, exchange participants will evaluate the brand lower than communalparticipants. When the return request is immediate, exchange participants will evaluate thebrand equal or higher than communal participants.
Role of Norm Violation:
One of the additional objectives of Experiment 3 was to more directly evaluate the
extent to which the consumers reactions and evaluations are caused by the violation of the
relationship norms using mediation analysis. Thus, the experimental materials included specific
questions being asked of the participants to judge the amount of norm violation and norm
conformity that they perceived due to the marketing action. Hypotheses 7a below predicts that
consumers perception of the violation of the norms of relationship as a result of the marketing
action taken by the brand (timing of the request for help) would differ depending upon the
relationship type. Specifically, if the return request made by the brand is delayed then exchange
participants would perceive a greater violation of norms relative to communal participants, but
when the return request is immediate then the violation of norms would be same or higher for
communal participants as compared to exchange participants.
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In addition, another question was asked to augment the participants evaluation of the
brand. In Experiments 1 and 2, the effect of the brands marketing action on participants
evaluation of the action as well as the overall evaluation of the brand were measured. One other
important measure of participants evaluation of the brand is their perception of the relationship
with the brand. Hence, it was predicted that when a return request by the brand is delayed,
relative to communal participants, exchange participants would perceive their relationship with
the brand to be worse than before. Conversely the perception of the relationship would be
perceived to be the same or worse for communal participants as compared to exchange
participants when the return request was immediate. Hypothesis 7b details this prediction.
Hypothesis 7a: Participants perception of the degree of norm violation in response to amarketing action (timing of the request for help sought) differs depending upon the relationshiptype. Specifically, if a brand seeks help with a delay, exchange participants will perceivegreater norm violation than communal participants. When the return request is immediate,exchange participants would perceive less or same degree of norm violation as communalparticipants.
Hypothesis 7b: Participants perception of their relationship with the brand in response to amarketing action (timing of the request for help sought) differs depending upon the relationshiptype. Specifically, if a brand seeks return help with a delay, exchange participants are more
likely than communal participants to perceive the relationship to get worse. When the returnrequest is immediate, exchange participants are less or as likely as communal participants toperceive the relationship to get worse.
Participants:
Participants were ninety-six students from a mid-sized university in mid-western USA who
were recruited on campus to do a 8-10 minute study. They were paid $5.00 for their
participation.
Stimuli and Procedure:
As in the first two experiments, participants were presented with a brief description of
their relationship with a fictitious brand in this case a coffee shop. These descriptions were
designed to prime norms of exchange or communal relationships and the participants were
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randomly assigned to one of these two conditions. The participants were asked to imagine
themselves in the situation described, and then to answer the questions that followed. The
descriptions are given below.
Priming of Exchange Relationship Norms:Mikes Coffee Shop is located a few blocks from where you live. You go there regularly both on weekdays as wellas weekends. You really enjoy going there the coffee is great, the place is nice and the people are efficient. Yougo there a lot and it is worth every penny spent. In fact, the place provides you more than a fair value for yourmoney. They know that it makes for good business to treat their customers well. The people there are polite andprovide very good service to you. Since you like it best to keep things as even as possible, you generally leavesome tip for them in the jar on the counter. You tend to think of Mikes Coffee Shop as a good business partner well-trained people, good service and a reasonable price. Of course, the combination of hot coffee and aconvenient location makes the place quite unbeatable. Their prices are a bit above the average, but then theyalways give you an even exchange for your money. Each time you visit Mikes Coffee Shop you appreciate themeven more.
Priming of Communal Relationship Norms:
Mikes Coffee Shop is located a few blocks from where you live. You go there regularly both on weekdays as wellas weekends. You really enjoy going there the coffee is great, the place is cozy and the people are fun. You feelspecial there, not just any regular customer. They understand what you need and make extra effort to fulfill it.Sometimes when you dont go there for a while, you start to miss them. And the feeling must be mutual since theyalso give you a big welcome back. You like them and care about them as much as seem to care about you. Itwould be a sad day if they were ever to close the place up. You have been going there for so long that they feellike family to you someone who is there for you. Of course, the combination of hot coffee and a warm placemakes it quite unbeatable. Their prices are a bit above the average, but their interaction with you is beyond justmoney. Each time you visit Mikes Coffee Shop you appreciate them even more.
After reading the description, the participants were asked several questions designed to
measure the effectiveness of the relationship priming. Participants were then presented with the
request for help from the coffee shop made after they helped the participant either in the
immediate condition as shown below in brackets, or in the delayed condition in parenthesis:
One afternoon when you went to the Coffee Shop you were keen to get your favorite blend but unfortunately it wasnot the one that was available that day. You went to the counter and asked them if they could make a pot speciallyfor you. They were happy to oblige.
[As soon as they agreed to make your favorite coffee they asked you for a favor] (Four weeks later when you wereat the restaurant, they asked you for a favor). The restaurant was doing a winter special promotion for the coming
weekend and had made some posters for it. They gave you about 5 of those posters and asked if you could putthem up at some key places on campus for them. Of course you could always refuse.
Design:
The experiment was a 2 x 2 between- participants Relationship Type (Communal,
Exchange) and Marketing Action (Immediate request, Delayed request) design.
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Dependent Variables:
Effectiveness of Priming: The measures of the effectiveness of priming in Experiment 3
were an expanded set of questions compared to the ones used in Experiments 1 and 2.
Specifically, additional questions were asked to supplement the communality scale to ensure
that the questions were tapping into norm-related differences and not some other general affect-
based dimensions. Therefore, in addition to the two questions used in Experiments 1 and 2
designed to tap into the communal aspect of the relationship (warm feelings, and treat you
special), there were seven other questions asked to tap into specific communal and exchange
norms (extent to which you would miss the brand, to what extent do thy care about you as a
person, extent to which you personally care about the brand, to what extent would they help you
even if it is not good for business, extent to which they give you good service because they like
you, extent to which they give you good service to get something back, and extent to which you
go there because it is good value for money paid). It was expected that when communal norms
are primed participants would give a higher rating than exchange participants for questions like
would help you even if it is not good for business since this is more consistent with a
communal orientation and less with an exchange orientation. On the other hand, communal
participants were expected to give a lower rating than exchange participants for give good
service to get something back since this question tapped more into an exchange orientation
than a communal one. All these additional questions designed to tap into the specific
relationship norms are as outlined in prior work by Clark (1986). In conjunction with the other
two items, these seven items are a stronger measure of the effectiveness of the priming of the
relationship norms in the two conditions. The last two of these seven new items were reverse
scored, and together these seven items were combined and are called Communal Norm Score.
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As in earlier experiments, participants were also asked to imagine the brand coming
alive and becoming a person and then rate the extent to which the brand was like each of the
five different people listed (a business partner, a close friend, a merchant, and a family
member). Again, as in the previous experiments, control measures were taken by asking
questions that tapped into two different aspects of quality perceptions (quality of products, and
quality of service). In addition, it was felt that an additional control measure be taken to ensure
that the priming of relationship type was not confounded with the degree of positive affect that
participants felt towards the brand. Hence another question was asked intended to be able to
distinguish the positive affect felt for the brand from the warm feelings from it (the extent to
which you have positive (but not warm) feelings towards the brand).
Reactions to Marketing Action: Participants reactions to the request for help from the
brand were measured to test the different hypotheses outlined earlier. To evaluate participants
reaction to the request per se, they were asked to respond the degree to which they were likely
to agree to the request. This question was aimed at testing Hypothesis 5.
Brand Evaluations: To test their overall evaluation of the brand the same nine items
were asked as in Experiments 1 and 2. These nine items were combined to test Hypothesis 6.
Norms and Relationship Evaluation: Three questions were asked to evaluate the extent
to which the participants differed in their perception of the violation of the norms of the
relationship (felt cornered, felt irritated with the request, and felt exploited) and three other
questions were asked to measure their perception of conformity with the norms (cared about the
brands needs, felt happy to help, felt the request was appropriate). These last three were
reverse scored and combined with the first three and called Norm Violation aimed at testing
Hypothesis 7a. Additionally, participants were also asked to indicate the degree to which they
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perceived the relationship with the brand had been weakened/strengthened after the interaction.
This measure tested Hypothesis 7b.
Results:
Effectiveness of Priming: Table 5 displays results for the questions asked to measure the
effectiveness of priming and the perception of quality. As in Experiments 1 and 2, participants
average ratings of communality score were compared across relationship conditions. ANOVA
showed that the participants in the communal condition had a higher communality score (on the
same two items as were used in the first two experiments) than those in the exchange condition,
F (1, 94) = 13.80, p
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affect perceived by the participants did not differ significantly across the two manipulations, F
(1,95) = 1.63, p>0.20.
Reactions to Marketing Action: The participants reaction to brands request for help
was examined first (see Table 6). Participants ratings on the one question that measured their
responses to the specific request (likelihood to agree) were compared across the different
conditions. Consistent with Hypothesis 5, timing of the request elicited different responses
from participants depending on relationship type. ANOVA revealed a significant effect of
Relationship Type X Marketing Action on the likelihood to agree to help the brand, F (1, 94) =
3.79, p=0.05. The main effect of Relationship Type was not significant, F (1, 94)=1.77,
p>0.15, nor was the main effect for Marketing Action, F (1, 94) = 1.40, p>0.20. Specific
contrasts revealed that when the return request was delayed, exchange participants provided
lower ratings of the action than communal participants, F (1, 94) = 5.44, p0.65. The other pair of contrasts were also looked at
and it was found that exchange participants ratings of the marketing action was lower when the
return request was delayed compared to when it was immediate, F (1,94)=4.95, p< 0.05.
However, the ratings of the action by communal participants did not differ when the return
request was delayed from when it was immediate, F (1, 94) = 0.29, p>0.55. This result also
showed that asymmetries exist in how participants respond to norm violation even without one
violation producing a monetary benefit.
Brand Evaluation: The differences in participants attitudes and brand evaluations were
then examined on the same nine items as in Experiments 1 and 2. The nine items were collapsed
into one factor termed Overall Evaluation (Cronbachs Alpha = 0.89). Results show a
marginally significant Relationship Type X Marketing Action on Overall Evaluation, F (1,93)
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= 2.69, p=0.10. The main effect of Relationship Type was not significant, F (1, 94)=1.40,
p>0.20, nor was the main effect for Marketing Action, F (1, 94) = 0.91, p>0.30. Although the
Relationship Type X Marketing Action interaction was only marginally significant, specific
comparisons are legitimate if there are theoretical basis for doing so (Winer 1971). Consistent
with Hypothesis 6, contrast analyses revealed that when the return request was delayed
exchange participants evaluated the brand lower than communal participants, F (1, 93) =4.17,
p0.75. Considered alternately,
exchange participants evaluated the brand marginally lower when the request was delayed than
when it was immediate, F (1, 93) = 3.52, p0.65.
Norm Violation and Perception of Relationship: Finally, the six questions asked to
measure the extent of norm violation were analyzed after combining them into one factor called
Norm Violation (Cronbachs Alpha = 0.76). Consistent with Hypothesis 7a, ANOVA
revealed a significant Relationship Type X Marketing Action interaction, F (1, 95) = 7.33,
p0.60, nor
was the main effect for Marketing Action, F (1, 95) = 0.01, p>0.90. Specific contrast showed
that when the return request was delayed, exchange participants perceived a greater violation of
the norms than communal participants, F (1, 95) = 5.11, p0.10.
Considered alternately, exchange participants perceived a greater norm violation when the
return request was delayed than when it was immediate, F (1, 95) =4.07, p
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participants perceived marginally greater violation of norms when the return request was
immediate than when delayed, F (1,95) = 3.29, p0.99. Contrast analyses revealed that when the return
request was delayed, the perception of the relationship of the exchange participants was not
significantly different from that of the communal participants, F (1, 95) =2.65, p=0.11. Further,
when the return request was immediate, the perception of the relationship of the exchange
participants was not significantly different than communal participants, F (1, 95) = 2.51,
p=0.11. Considered alternately, exchange participants did not perceive the relationship to be
significantly different when the request was delayed from when it was immediate, F (1, 95) =
2.65, p=0.11, nor was there a significant difference in the perception of the relationship by
communal participants when the request was delayed from when the request was immediate, F
(1, 95) = 2.51, p=0.11. While none of the contrasts were significant, all of them were
directional, suggesting that all the differences contributed to the significant interaction that was
observed. These results were consistent with the results found in the questions about norm
violation.
Mediation Analysis: Our conceptualization of how consumer-brand relationships
influence consumer evaluations of marketing actions suggests that norm violations serve as
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mediators. According to Baron and Kenny (1986), a variable can be classified as a mediator
when it meets three conditions: 1) independent variables significantly account for variation in
the hypothesized mediator, 2) variations in the mediator account for variation in the dependent
variable, and 3) when the variance in 1 and 2 above are controlled, the previously significant
relation between the independent and dependent variables should no longer be significant. To
test whether the degree of norm violation mediated the consumer responses, I did two sets of
mediation analysis one for Overall Evaluation and the other Perception of Relationship.
To test the mediational role of norm violation I estimated the regression model with
Overall Evaluation as the dependent variable, and Relationship Type, Marketing Action,
Relationship Type X Marketing Action interaction and Norm Violation as the independent
variables. The results of the analysis show that the variance accounted for by the previously
significant interaction between Relationship Type and Marketing Action disappears (T=-0.09,
p=0.92) when Norm Violation is included in the regression (see Table 7). Additionally, to test
the mediational role of norm violation on Perception of Relationship I estimated the regression
model with Perception of Relationship as the dependent variable, and Relationship Type,
Marketing Action, Relationship Type X Marketing Action interaction and Norm Violation as
the independent variables. The results of the analysis show that the variance accounted for by
the previously significant interaction between Relationship Type and Marketing Action
disappears (T=-0.87, p=0.38) when Norm Violation is included in the regression (see Table 7).
Both these results provide strong evidence for the mediating role of norm violation in how
consumers react to marketing actions under different relationship types.
Discussion:
The results of Experiment 3 replicate the findings of the first two experiments that
people evaluate a brand differently depending on what relationship norms are salient.
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Specifically, the results of the experiment showed that a delay in the request for a return favor
led to a poorer evaluation by exchange participants relative to communal participants since the
delay in the request was seen as a violation of exchange norms being more likely to be seen as
an attempt to get something free from the partner. Results also showed that when the request
for a return favor was immediate, the evaluation was not significantly different for communal
and exchange participants. While an immediate request for return favor was in keeping with the
norms of exchange relationship and in violation of communal norms, the effect of the violation
of communal norms was muted. It is likely that an immediate request for help was seen as a
genuine need of the partner something that would reduce the impact of norm violation.
One important objective of Experiment 3 was to investigate more directly the role of
norms and to find out if the results that we observe were guided by the violation of and
conformity to these norms. The findings of the experiment provide strong evidence about the
role of norms in participants responses to the brands actions. The expanded list of items
measuring the effectiveness of priming (Norm Salience) showed that the experimental
scenario successfully primed the norms of the two relationships. Further, the dependent
measures of Norm Violation showed that there were differences in participants perception of
norm violation as a result of the brands marketing action. The results show that the
participants evaluation of the brand and the brands actions were much lower when they also
perceived greater norm violation, and their evaluation was higher when no norm violation was
perceived. In addition there was evidence that participants perception of the relationship
strength was influenced by norm violation it was perceived to be weaker when the brands
actions violated the norms but stronger if the actions conformed to the norms. Further support
for the role of norm violation in participants evaluation was provided by the results of the
mediation analysis. These results showed that participants evaluation of the brand, and their
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perception of relationship strength, was influenced by whether or not the norms of that
relationship were violated by the marketing action taken by the brand.
Finally, an additional aspect of this experiment is that like the previous two experiments,
the results were stronger for one relationship type than for the other. This pattern of results in
Experiment 3 was found not just for the evaluations of the brands actions, its overall evaluation
and the strength of the relationship but also for the perception of norm violation. As mentioned
before it is possible that communal participants are more likely to help their relationship
partners, and as a result they perceived a weaker violation of norms even when the request for a
return favor was immediate something that otherwise is in violation of the communal norms.
GENERAL DISCUSSIONThe objective of this research was to test the hypothesis that consumers reactions to
actions taken by a brand differ depending upon the type of relationship norms that are salient at
the time. Three experiments were carried out to test this hypothesis and successfully primed the
relationship norms by using scenario descriptions of different hypothetical consumer-brand
interactions without simultaneously changing consumers perceptions of brand quality. In
Experiment 1 consumer reactions were measured when they were charged (or not charged) for a
special service provided by the brand. In Experiment 2 consumer reactions to different forms of
compensation (gift or cash) for filling out a questionnaire for the brand were assessed. Finally
in Experiment 3, consumer responses to the timing (immediate or delayed) of a request made by
the brand were assessed. Results of all three experiments showed that consumer responses
depended upon whether or not the brands actions were in violation of or in conformity with the
norms of that relationship. It was also found that when the norm violation was muted or
accompanied with a monetary benefit, the participants negative responses were also muted. An
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important finding of the research is that the participants responses were not limited to
evaluation of the marketing actions per se but extended to their overall evaluation of the brand.
Findings of Experiment 3 also provided further evidence of the mediating role of norms in
consumers evaluation of the brand, and also on their perception of the relationship. Thus
results of all three experiments support the overall hypothesis that consumers apply relationship
norms in interactions with brands and use these norms to guide their behavior and to make
overall brand evaluations.
More generally speaking the results of the three experiments give us confidence that
communal and exchange relationships, and more specifically the norms of behavior that guide
these relationships, are a legitimate way to think of consumer-brand interactions. These
experiments have tested one very specific behavioral and attitudinal predictions based on the
binary distinction between communal and exchange relationships. Given the very rich field of
inter-personal relationships, we should be able to enrich our knowledge of consumer-brand
relationships by studying more complex multi-faceted relationships over time.
MANAGERIAL IMPLICATIONS
The results of the three experiments have some interesting implications for managers. As
highlighted by Experiment 1, establishing a communal relationship with consumers is not free
and has some clear cost implications. The customer may feel closer to the brand but the
accompanying r